After the United States entered World War I in 1917, the government hastily built new facilities both to train Army medical personnel and to provide care for soldiers wounded during the fighting or stricken with disease. The War Department set up many hospitals during and immediately after the war expressly for the purposes of treating service members with tuberculosis, which was the third leading cause of death among Americans during this period. The military completed its largest tuberculosis hospital at Oteen, North Carolina, near the city of Asheville at the foothills of the Smokey Mountains, in early 1919. Asheville at that time was a popular destination among tuberculosis sufferers, who sojourned there to enjoy the restorative benefits of the clean mountain air. In 1920, the Army handed over most of its medical facilities, Oteen included, to the Public Health Service (PHS). Two years later, PHS transferred Oteen and the other hospitals in its system that specialized in Veteran care to the newly established Veterans’ Bureau.
In its first two years of operation under the Army and PHS, Oteen admitted over 5,000 patients. The sprawling, 346-acre campus included forty-six tuberculosis wards to house men undergoing treatment. Oteen quickly established itself as the nation’s top treatment center for soldiers and Veterans with tubercular or other respiratory ailments. It also led the way in the development and teaching of tuberculosis protocols. In the early 1920s, the hospital hosted several training programs for doctors and nurses interested in learning the latest diagnosis and treatment methods for patients suffering from the disease. Throughout the decade and into the next, the Veterans’ Bureau made major investments in the infrastructure at Oteen, replacing the wood-frame tuberculosis wards and other structures with larger, more durable buildings of concrete and steel. The centerpiece of this new construction was the stately, four-story Administration building, completed in 1928 at a cost of $750,000, which contained laboratories, operating rooms, and additional bed space. Oteen’s growth continued after the Veterans’ Administration replaced the Veterans’ Bureau in 1930. In 1932, the facility added four new hospitals wards, a dining hall, and two nurse dormitories for training rotations.
In addition to providing medical care, the hospital in its initial years included a Reconstruction Department dedicated to the rehabilitation of the infirm. The physical and occupational therapy programs offered at Oteen aimed to return men to military service. If that was not possible, they focused on helping patients adapt to their disabilities and learn new skills. Very few of the Reconstruction Aides were trained therapists; instead, they were artists, crafts persons, and teachers. At Oteen, they taught basic education classes like reading and writing, but also printing, painting, silversmithing, weaving, and even beekeeping. These activities were designed to improve dexterity, mental resilience, and morale while also preparing disabled soldiers and Veterans for their return to civilian life.
In 1967, a new hospital, now known as the Charles George VA Medical Center, took the place of the medical complex on the original Oteen campus, although some of the older buildings remained in use. Its days as one of the premier tuberculosis hospitals have long passed, thanks to advances in the detection, control, and treatment of the disease that have reduced tuberculosis case rates in the United States to among the lowest in the world. An important legacy of its early years lives on, however, as the medical center continues to serve as a focal point for the training and education of doctors, through its academic partnerships with area medical schools.
By Heather South, Lead Archivist, North Carolina Western Regional Archives and Rodney Doty, Visual Information Specialist, Charles George VA Medical Center
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Object 86: The Roll of Honor
“The following pages are devoted to the memory of those heroes who have given up their lives upon the altar of their country, in defense of the American Union.”
So opened the preface to the first volume of the Roll of Honor, a compendium of over 300,000 Federal soldiers who died during the Civil War and were interred in national and other cemeteries. The genesis of this 27-volume collection published between 1865 and 1871 can be traced to Quartermaster General Montgomery C. Meigs and the department he oversaw for a remarkable 21 years from 1861 to 1882.
History of VA in 100 Objects
Object 85: Congressman Claypool’s “$1 Per Day Pension” Ribbon
Founded in 1866 as fraternal organization for Union Veterans, the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) embraced a new mission in the 1880s: political activism. The GAR formed a pension committee in 1881 for the express purpose of lobbying Congress for more generous pension benefits.
An artifact from the political wrangling over pensions is now part of the permanent collection of the National VA History Center in Dayton, Ohio. The item is a small pension ribbon displaying the message: “I endorse the $1 per day pension as recommended by the Departments of Ohio and Indiana G.A.R.” The button attached to the ribbon features two American flags and the phrase “saved by the boys of ’61-65.” The back of the ribbon bears the signature of Horatio C. Claypool, a Democratic judge who ran for the seat in Ohio’s eleventh Congressional district in the 1910 mid-term elections.
History of VA in 100 Objects
Object 84: Gettysburg Address Tablet
President Abraham Lincoln is one of the most revered figures in American history. Rankings of U.S. presidents routinely place him at or near the top of the list. Lincoln is also held in high esteem at VA. His stirring call during his second inaugural address in 1865 to “care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan” embodies the nation’s promise to all who wear the uniform, a promise VA and its predecessor administrations have kept ever since the Civil War.
Ever since Lincoln first uttered those memorable words in November 1863, the Gettysburg Address has been linked to our national cemeteries. In 1908, Congress approved a plan to produce a standard Gettysburg Address tablet to be installed in all national cemeteries in time for the centennial of President Lincoln’s birth on February 12, 1909.